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MCSE Notes for Ethernet 10.

 

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Quick Reference Guide to 10BASE-FL Fiber Optic Ethernet

6.2 Old and New Fiber Link Segments


The most commonly used fiber optic medium type is the link segment. There are two fiber optic link segments in use, the original Fiber Optic Inter-Repeater Link (FOIRL) segment, and the newer 10BASE-FL segment.

The original FOIRL specification from the Ethernet standard of the early 1980s provided a link segment of up to 1000 meters between two repeaters only. As the cost of repeaters dropped and more and more multiport repeater hubs were used, it became cost-effective to link individual computers to a fiber optic port on a repeater hub. Vendors created outboard FOIRL MAUs to allow this, although a repeater-to-DTE fiber connection was not specifically described in the FOIRL standard.

To deal with this and other aspects of fiber optic Ethernet, a set of fiber optic media standards, called 10BASE-F, was developed. This set of fiber standards includes revised specifications for a fiber optic link segment that allow direct attachments to computers. The full set of 10BASE-F specifications includes three segment types:

  • 10BASE-FL. The 10BASE-FL standard replaces the older FOIRL specifications, and is designed to interoperate with existing FOIRL-based equipment. 10BASE-FL provides a fiber optic link segment that may be up to 2000 meters long, providing that only 10BASE-FL equipment is used in the segment. If 10BASE-FL equipment is mixed with FOIRL equipment, then the maximum segment length may be 1000 meters.

    • A 10BASE-FL segment may be attached between two computers, or two repeaters, or between a computer and a repeater port. Because of the widespread use of fiber links, 10BASE-FL is the most widely used portion of the 10BASE-F fiber optic specifications, and equipment is available from a large number of vendors.

  • 10BASE-FB. The 10BASE-FB specifications describe a synchronous signaling backbone segment that allows the limit on the number of repeaters that may be used in a given 10-Mbps Ethernet system to be exceeded. 10BASE-FB links typically attach to repeater hubs, and are used to link special 10BASE-FB synchronous signalling repeater hubs together in a repeated backbone system that can span long distances. Individual 10BASE-FB links may be up to 2000 meters in length. This system has a limited market and equipment is available from only a few vendors.

  • 10BASE-FP. The Fiber Passive system provides a set of specifications for a fiber optic mixing segment that links multiple computers on a fiber optic media system without using repeaters. 10BASE-FP segments may be up to 500 meters long, and a single 10BASE-FP fiber optic passive star coupler may link up to 33 computers. This system has not been widely adopted and equipment does not appear to be generally available.


Quick Reference Guide to 10BASE-FL Fiber Optic Ethernet - 04 SEP 95
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A Shortcut for Defining the Network IDs

Acknowledgments

Adding Entries to WINS from an LMHOSTS File

Adding HOSTS

Adding Other Records

Address Reservations

Address Resolution Protocol

Addressing

Addressing with IP Version 6

Administering a WINS Environment

Advanced Configuration Options

An FTP Server Does Not Seem to Work

Announcement Periods

Architectural Overview of the TCP/IP Suite

ARP

Arpa-127.rev File

Assigning Host IDs

Assigning Network IDs

Authentication

Automatic Restoration

Backing Up the DHCP Database

Backing Up the WINS Database

BIND Boot File

b-node

Bridges

Broadcast

Broadcasts

Browsing in a TCP/IP Internetwork

Browsing in an IP Internetwork

Browsing in Windows NT

Browsing Over Subnets

Browsing Roles

Browsing Tools

Building a Multihomed Router

Building a Static Routing Table

Cache Command

Callback Security

Callback with Multilink

Classes Defined

Client Access

Client Requirements

CNAME Record

Collecting the Browse List

Common RAS Problems

Communicating Over TCP/IP

Compacting the DHCP Database

Compacting the WINS Database

Configure HOSTS Files

Configure LMHOSTS File

Configuring a Client for WINS

Configuring as an IP Forwarder

Configuring for Caching-Only